Show me
of
Words that sound like "fresh" — phonetic neighbours useful for wordplay, puns, song lyrics, and dialogue.
(adj)
Newly produced or obtained; recent.
Relevance: 0%
(n)
A surname.
Easily broken; brittle; crisp.
(colloquial) A first-year student, at certain universities, and a first-or-second-year student at other universities.
(informal) A refrigerator.
A surname from German.
(v)
(transitive) To chafe or irritate; to worry.
(British) A first-year student at a university.
(adv)
Anew; again; once more.
(countable, colloquial, US, Philippines) A freshman.
A vitreous compound, used by potters in glazing, consisting of lime, silica, borax, lead, and soda.
Gottlob Frege, a German mathematician and philosopher.
(UK) A dispute, a quarrel; a fight or brawl.
(countable) A typically cold-blooded vertebrate animal that lives in water, moving with the help of fins and breathing with gills.
(intransitive) To thrive or grow well.
(intransitive) Of hair, to form into a mass of tight curls.
(transitive) To provide a place with furniture, or other equipment.
A strip of pleated fabric or paper used as decoration or trim.
Obsolete form of frizz. [A mass of tightly curled or unruly hair.]
A title of a friar or monk: brother.
A fused mixture of materials used to make glass.
To renovate or recondition; to refurbish.
A phishing attack.
(obsolete outside dialects, e.g. Lunenburg, Nova Scotia) to eat without restraint; eat heartily
(archaic) wild; savage; feral
Of moderate quality, size, etc.
(N)
a programming language for first-order predicate calculus.
A surname from Spanish [in turn from Galician].
Containing or resembling iron.
Alternative form of frit (“material for making glass”). [A fused mixture of materials used to make glass.]
(South Africa) Initialism of provincial heritage resources authority.
The soft tissue of the body, especially muscle and fat.
Easily broken physically; not firm or durable; liable to fail and perish.
(transitive, ditransitive) To retrieve; to bear towards; to go and get.
Shortened form of fraternity, college organization. (Often used as a noun modifier.)
(figurative) Followed by with: carrying, or charged or loaded up with (usually something negative); accompanied by; entailing.
(slang) Fashionable.
(slightly dated) Used as a courtesy title before the surname of a (typically married) German-speaking woman.
(entomology) The droppings or excrement of insect larvae.
Obsolete spelling of frail. [Easily broken physically; not firm or durable; liable to fail and perish.]
(heraldry) A stylized strawberry with leaves.
A friar.
A surname from Old French.
Obsolete form of fraught. [(nautical) Of a boat, ship, or other vessel: laden with cargo.]
Sullen or recalcitrant.
(historical) A ruler-shaped instrument, generally used to slap naughty children on the hand.
In Roman mythology, Fraus was the goddess of personification of treachery and fraud.
Abounding in firs.
Alternative spelling of flèche. [(fencing) To attack using the flèche method.]
Alternative spelling of fore edge. [The front edge of something.]